Friday, October 10, 2014

On Wednesday, police arrested two Guatemalan nationals, ages
16 and 17, following a high speed chase which ended on Interstate 80, just
outside Iowa City.

Around 6 a.m., the pair walked out of Maryville Academy in
Des Plaines, Ill., and committed their first carjacking of the day. They then
drove 165 miles to a Walmart in Moline, Iowa, where they ordered a
91-year-old man out of his car, according to police.

Moline Police Det. Scott Williams stated: "They
obviously chose him to take his vehicle. He walked with a cane. They watched
him go in and get his medication from the VA."

The illegal aliens smashed
into a car on the way out of the parking lot, driving another 220 miles in the
stolen vehicle, until so-called 'stop sticks' were thrown in their path by Iowa
state troopers. Their actions were captured on store surveillance video. The two suspects came to the U.S. in the
recent surge of illegal aliens flooding across our border from Central America
and Mexico.

The teens had been transferred to the Illinois
facility after crossing the US-Mexico border as unaccompanied minors and
requesting asylum in the United States.

Maryville
Academy is a residential facility for at-risk and mentally-ill
youths. The U.S. Health and Human Services agency has sent a number of so-called
"unaccompanied minors" to the facility in the last several months.

Though U.S. Border Patrol agents have reported that many of
the more than 60,000 minors who have come to this country illegally over the
last several months, are gang members, Obama administration policy demands that
they be allowed to enter. Many of these teens have been identified as members
of the hyper-violent Latin American gang known as MS-13.

Wednesday's incidents have reportedly prompted federal
officials to order a "security assessment" at all facilities
currently housing illegal aliens.